Landscape Journal 35:2 ISSN 0277-2426
© 2017 by the Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System
CULTURAL LANDSCAPES AS LANDSCAPE
ARCHITECTURE
This special issue spotlights new scholarship about cul-
tural landscape research and practice that documents
the continued and vital role of this field in contempo-
rary landscape architecture. The term “cultural land-
scape” was coined by cultural geographers in the 1920s
and adopted by landscape architects in the 1980s, but
the study and analysis of cultural landscapes have
been key elements of design practice long before being
formally named. Landscape architecture is rooted in
creative responses to the cultural history and natural
processes of the sites in which landscape design occurs.
The authors contributing to this issue illuminate
ways in which cultural landscape research has shaped
landscape conservation and historic preservation
eforts and been integrated into innovative and creative
landscape design. These essays and case studies break
down distinctions between landscape history and land
conservation, between historic preservation and new
design, and ultimately between culture and nature.
Cultural landscape practice today ofers essential the-
ory and methods for understanding and representing
landscapes as living places—the sites of historical and
ongoing natural processes together with the cultural
activities that have shaped terrain and ecosystems over
time and into the present.
Continued investigation and research in the field
of cultural landscapes is needed now more than ever
as designers are asked to expand and change their
practices to address current essential concerns. The
issues confronting practitioners—climate change,
global urbanization, economic inequality—are
unprecedented, and the severity of these challenges
increases the need for cultural landscape research.
Landscape architects engaged in the field of cultural
landscapes today are building a critical and neces-
sary dimension of continued and innovative success in
design practice.
ORIGINS OF CULTURAL LANDSCAPE RESEARCH IN
THE UNITED STATES
Perspectives on the cultural landscape—its pres-
ervation and its relevance to design and planning
practice—abound in the writings of the Ameri-
can landscape architect and planner Charles Eliot
(1859–1897). At age fifteen, Eliot recorded an 1874
trip through South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida
with written and visual impressions of landscapes,
people, and local customs; a year later he made
detailed notes during a short trip to a manufactur-
ing village, describing a woolen mill, tannery, and
stream. Eliot continued his landscape observations
during a thirteen-month tour of Europe (suggested by
his mentor Frederick Law Olmsted) during which he
meticulously noted the characteristics of a wide range
of cultural landscapes, expressing disapproval of for-
mal French layouts, dismay at the “nabobry” evident
on some English estates, and delight at the “roughly,
wildly beautiful” appearance of an island near Stock-
holm (Morgan 1999, xxii).
Of all the sites Eliot visited over this grand tour,
none afected him more than the park created by
Prince Hermann Pückler at Muskau, Germany. Eliot
wrote enthusiastically and at length about the massive
undertaking, admiring especially its comprehensive-
ness: “[Pückler] preserved everything that was dis-
tinctive. He destroyed neither his farm nor his mill,
nor yet his alum works; for he understood that these
industries, together with all the human history of the
valley, contributed to the general efect, a character-
istic element only second in importance to the quality
of the natural scene itself” (Eliot 1902, 363). Pückler’s
vision, which incorporated everyday landscapes into a
cohesive scheme comprising hundreds of square miles,
provided a model that Eliot would soon employ in his
Boston regional park work. Eliot’s writings on Pückler
also brought his achievements before the American
profession, leading eventually to a 1917 reprint of
Designing Living Landscapes
Cultural Landscapes as Landscape Architecture
Special Issue Editors
Cari Goetcheus, Robin Karson, Ethan Carr